That's incorrect. Christ quoted or incorporated quite a number of passages from the apocrypha, which means He knew about and was familiar with them.
DEUTEROCANONICAL BOOKS IN THE NEW TESTAMENT - Scripture Catholic
PS - It's also obvious Peter, James, Paul and the writers of Hebrews and Revelation were familiar with the Apocrypha.
I think Oscarr was referring to direct quotes, as there are many in the New Testament from the standard Old Testament. I tend to agree that the Apocrypha are more important than most Protestant denominations agree, and that including them in the canon does not dilute the base theology of the rest of the Bible. However, these lists (as the link is one of) tend to misrepresent the facts of the scriptures they reference.
I started going through the link one reference at a time, and after realizing that this post would be way too long, I stopped after the first 20 or so, since the point was made from that. My opinion is that most of these references are not actually references at all. There are a few that are legitimate, but I wish these sites would stick to the legitimate links instead of muddying the water with the bogus references. It would I think strengthen their argument.
Wisdom 11:7 / Matthew 2:16
Wisdom refers to the killing of infants by Egypt, not Herod.
Sirach 29:11 / Matthew 6:19,20 and Tobit 4:15 / Matthew 7:12
The fact that these comparisons have similar doctrines does not imply that they couldn't have originated independently. I could similarly suggest that the Hammurabi code of justice from the first dynasty of Babylon is inspired, because the law of Moses appears to borrow from many elements of it.
Sirach 27:6 / Matthew 7:16-20
This is close enough that it is conceivable that Sirach's words influenced the choice of metaphors, though it is not a direct quote.
Judith 11:19 / Matthew 9:36
Identical metaphor, but only a single sentence which would seem like a common comparison considering how common shepherds were at that time.
Tobit 7:18 / Matthew 11:25
The online versions that I see (NRSVCE) and the (LXX) only have 16 verses in Tobit 7, so maybe there is a typo here.
Matthew 12:42
The queen is visiting Solomon the king for his wisdom, not reading "Wisdom of Solomon" the book, which might not have even been written yet.
Wisdom 16:13 / Matthew 16:18
A serious stretch to connect these two.
Tobit 3:8 & 7:11 / Matthew 22:24 & Mark 12:10 & Luke 20:29
This one is very interesting. I think this proves that the book of Tobit existed at the time of Jesus. Although it is the Sadducees that are quoting it, not Jesus who they are trying to trick. I would suggest from this; however, that Jesus probably was aware of the book at the very least.
1 Maccabees 1:54 & 2 Maccabees 8:17 / Matthew 24:15
These are clearly the same events, though Jesus is actually quoting from Daniel 11:31, not the Maccabees. That being said, a significant portion of Jewish history is missing without the Maccabees in the Bible. Daniel prophecies about it, Jesus references it, and history only knows the details from the Apocryphal books. (Chanukah, the holiday originating from this period is also celebrated in John 10:22)
1 Maccabees 2:28 / Matthew 24:16
Jesus is definitely alluding to a period that his followers would recognize, and when people had to do the same thing. Oppression by the Greeks cause a desecration of the 2nd temple, and later the Romans besieged Jerusalem and destroyed the temple completely. A lot of different ideas surround the interpretation of Matthew here, so it might affect your view of the parallel nature of the past, the current generation (relative to Jesus) and a possible futurist interpretation.
Wisdom 2:18 / Matthew 27:43
I think this reference cannot be considered a quote; however, it is profound if you take Wisdom chapter 2 in its entirety. It reads like a prophecy of Jesus, and Jesus enemies in Matthew 27:43,44 are fulfilling the prophecy.
Sirach 40:15 / Mark 4:5,16,17
Not buying into this connection at all.
Judith 16:17 / Mark 9:48
Same result. Not the same target. Don't think I could call this a reference.
Judith 13:18 / Luke 1:42
No, the two have nothing to do with each other besides the same compliment.
Sirach 10:14 / Luke 1:52
Very weak similarity to a similar doctrine.
Tobit 11:9 / Luke 2:29
No, again nothing to do with each other here.
Baruch 4:37 / Luke 13:29
Baruch is referring to returning Jews from Babylon. Luke is referring to people in the future coming to Jerusalem to worship. No real connection. (Will not get sidetracked into Zionist interpretations in this thread though.)
One final comment is that some Old Testament->New Testament references that people quote are weak arguments too, but in this case the majority falls on the legitimate reference side.